Boot from a VHD using Windows 7
How to Boot from a VHD using Windows 7 and Windows 8
How to Boot from a VHD using Windows 7 and
Windows 8
Information
Windows
7 and Windows 8 includes support for creating, mounting and booting
from VHD images but not many seem to know how to use this functionality
to boot VHDs at boot time... I will detail the steps required to have
another OS bootable using Windows 7...
This tutorial will show you how to setup Windows 7 or Windows 8 to boot from an existing VHD (Virtual Hard Disk).
All Vista, Windows 7, and Windows 8 (except Windows 8 RT) editions support booting from a VHD.
You must have either Windows 7 Ultimate, Windows 7 Enterprise, Windows 8 Pro, or Windows 8 Enterprise installed on the VHD to be able to boot from the VHD.
This tutorial will show you how to setup Windows 7 or Windows 8 to boot from an existing VHD (Virtual Hard Disk).
All Vista, Windows 7, and Windows 8 (except Windows 8 RT) editions support booting from a VHD.
You must have either Windows 7 Ultimate, Windows 7 Enterprise, Windows 8 Pro, or Windows 8 Enterprise installed on the VHD to be able to boot from the VHD.
Warning
If
you do not have a good knowledge of how to reset your VirtualOS
configuration like HAL type and driver configuration then your VHD will
fail to boot. It must be cleaned of VirtualOS configuration correctly
before Windows can boot your VHD!!
Step 1: If you have not already, create or attach an existing a VHD using the tutorial below.Virtual Hard Disk - Create and Attach VHDStep 2: Open an elevated command prompt.
Step 3: Copy and Paste this command below and press Enter.
NOTE: Substitute VHD_Boot in the command below for what you want to be displayed as the name in Windows Boot Manager.bcdedit /copy {current} /d "VHD_Boot"
If the command succeeds, BCDEdit displays a message similar to the following:
The entry was successfully copied to {CLSID_Number}
Step 4: Then type this command below and press Enter.Take note of the CLSID number as you will need this during the next step
NOTE: Substitute C with the drive letter your VHD is on, and substitute disk1 with the name of your VHD file.bcdedit /set {CLSID_Number} osdevice vhd=[C:]\disk1.vhd
Step 5: Thats it, You can now boot VHDs using Windows 7
To confirm the settings simply type bcdedit
If your VHD is configured correctly You can reboot and select the extra boot-option to boot from your VHD
Warning
VirtualPC VHDs can not be used
for booting with Windows because VirtualPC uses a Pentium 3 HAL and
this prevents them from being used as boot media, You can however use
this Tutorial: Virtual Hard Disk - Create and Attach VHD and create then mount a VHD for use with VMWare Workstation....
You
simply set VMWare workstation to use a Physical Disk, you can then
Install a separate OS onto this mounted VHD for use with Windows.
Tip
You
Must reset your VHD VirtualOS configuration like HAL type and driver
configuration or your VHD will fail to boot!!! It must be cleaned of
VirtualOS configuration correctly before windows 7 can boot your VHD!!
Note
There
are still many bugs associated with VHD booting with Windows 7 at this
time, I suspect Microsoft will be releasing a new Version of VirtualPC
that's able to manage this entire process of creating, installing and
booting separate VHDs at boot-time easily and without so many problems
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